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Apostolos GeorgiadisDepartment of Microwave Systems and NanotechnologyCentre Tecnologic de Telecomunicacions de Catalunya

(CTTC)Barcelona - Spain

Signal Optimization and Rectenna Design for Electromagnetic Energy Harvesting and

Wireless Power Transfer

2

Outline

• Introduction • Rectenna design

− Dual band− Load independent performance

• Signal design− Random modulation, noise, chaotic signals− Mode locked oscillators

• Some circuits…!− Solar powered RF circuits− Multi-technology harvesters

• Conclusion

3

CTTC, Castelldefels – BarcelonaFounded in 2001

4

CTTC, Castelldefels – Barcelona• Research staff: 35 Ph.D., 20 M.Sc, 3500-m2 building

• 3 Research Divisions: Comm. Systems, Comm. Networks, Comm. Technologies

• Department of Microwave Systems and Nanotechnology

5

CTTC, Castelldefels – Barcelona, SPAIN

• Energy Harvesting and RFID• Oscillator design including integrated

CMOS oscillators (Fig. 1)• Active antennas, phased arrays (Fig. 2),

retro-directive arrays (Fig. 3)• Substrate Integrated Waveguide (SIW) (Fig. 4)• Efficient Power Amplifier (Fig. 5)

Active microwave circuit design

Fig. 1. CMOS VCO for UWB-FM

Fig. 2. C-band Coupled Oscillator Reflectrarray prototype

Fig. 3. S-band retro-directive array.

Fig. 4. SIW circuits.

Fig. 5. Power Amplifier (SIW).

6

Rectenna Design

Reported UHF rectifier efficiencies for available input power levels in the order of 10 uW are near 20%, and increase to >50% for available power levels of 100uW.

Rectifier circuits: envelope detector, charge pump circuits

Schottky diodes, low / zero barrier diodes

7

Rectenna Design

Rectenna optimization using the RECEIVE antennaThevenin (or Norton) equivalent circuit

Multiple goal harmonic balance for optimizing the RF-DC conversion efficiency

Georgiadis, A.; Andia Vera, G.; Collado, A., "Rectenna design and optimization using reciprocity theory and harmonic balance analysis for electromagnetic (EM) energy harvesting," Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters, IEEE , vol.9, no., pp.444,446, 2010

8

Rectenna Design

Georgiadis, A.; Andia Vera, G.; Collado, A., "Rectenna design and optimization using reciprocity theory and harmonic balance analysis for electromagnetic (EM) energy harvesting," Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters, IEEE , vol.9, no., pp.444,446, 2010

Open circuit voltage maybe calculated using reciprocity theory

Harmonic balance for the optimization of the RF-DC conversion efficiency

9

• The open circuit voltage MAGNITUDE can also be calculated using the antenna effective area

48 ,

8 ,HOW DO THEY COMPARE ?

C. A. Balanis, Antenna Theory: Analysis and Design, 3rd Ed., Wiley,2005R. E. Collin , Antennas and Radiowave Propagation . New York: Mc-Graw-Hill, 1985.

Rectenna Design

10

• Circuit topologyimportantin low available powerconditions

• Trade-off betweenefficiencyand output voltage

Rectenna Design

11

RF to DC conversion efficiency optimization: Broadband Case

12

RF to DC conversion efficiency optimization: Dual-Band Case

13

Theoretical limits: impedance bandwidthBode-Fano criteria (see e.g. D. Pozar, Microwave Eng.)

Lossless Matching NetworkΓ(ω)

CRln 1Γ ≤|Γ(ω )|

Γm 1

Δω

ω Δ ln 1Γ ≤

What is the miminum reflection coefficient if one wants to cover a freq. band from 800 MHz to 2.6 GHz ?

Let R = 1.5 KOhm, and C = 0.9 pF

14

Rectenna Design850 MHz/1850 MHz Dual Band Rectenna• Βroadband monopole antenna (0.7GHz - 6 GHz)

• Akaflex PCL3-35/75 μm with εr = 3.3 and tanδ = 0.08

• Silicon Schottky diode (Skyworks SMS7630)

• Coplanar waveguide matching network

• Optimization for input power of -20 dBm and RL=2.2 kΩef

ficie

ncy

(%)

Collado, A.; Georgiadis, A., "Conformal Hybrid Solar and Electromagnetic (EM) Energy Harvesting Rectenna," Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on , vol.60, no.8, pp.2225,2234, Aug. 2013

15

Rectenna Design Optimization goals are used to maximize the RF-DC conversion efficiency at 915 MHz and 2.45 GHz = 48% and = 39% at 915 MHz

and 2.45 GHz, for Pin=0 dBm <1 % for Pin<-33 dBm

Niotaki, K.; Sangkil Kim; Seongheon Jeong; Collado, A.; Georgiadis, A.; Tentzeris, M.M., "A Compact Dual-Band RectennaUsing Slot-Loaded Dual Band Folded Dipole Antenna," Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters, IEEE , vol.12, no., pp.1634,1637, 2013

16

Rectenna Design

• = 37% and = 20% at 915 MHz and 2.45 GHz for a power density of 1 uW/cm2

− 1 uW/cm2 corresponds to Pin=-9 dBm and Pin=-15 dBm at 915 MHz and at 2.45 GHz

[1] A. Collado, and A. Georgiadis, "Conformal Hybrid Solar and Electromagnetic (EM) Energy Harvesting Rectenna," IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. I, Reg. Papers, vol. 60, no. 8, pp.2225,2234, Aug. 2013[2] B. L. Pham and A.-V. Pham, "Triple Bands Antenna and High Efficiency Rectifier Design for RF Energy Harvesting at 900, 1900 and 2400 MHz," in Proc. IEEE MTT-S Int. Microwave Symp., Seattle, WA, 2–7 June 2013.[3] V.Rizzoli, G. Bichicchi, A. Costanzo, F. Donzelli, and D. Masotti, "CAD of multi-resonator rectennafor micro-power generation," in Proc. Microwave Integrated Circuits Conference (EuMIC 2009), 28-29 Sept. 2009, pp.331–334.

17

Rectenna Design• Challenge: load and input power variation• Resistance compression networks

Y. Han, O. Leitermann, D.A. Jackson, J.M. Rivas, and D.J. Perreault, “Resistance Compression Networks forRadio-Frequency Power Conversion, ” IEEE Trans. on Power Electronics, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 41-53, Jan. 2007.

100 101 102 1030

100

200

300

400

500

Load Resistance (Ohm)In

put R

esis

tanc

e (O

hm)

Load resistance variation: 3 Ohm – 1000 Ohm

Input resistance variation: 55 Ohm – 500 Ohm

18

Dual-Band Resistance CompressionNetworks

• Resistance Compression Networks− Identical Rload variations− Opposite phase response

RCN operating at single frequency Dual-Band RCN

19

Dual-Band Resistance CompressionNetworks• Dual-Band RCNs

− Opposite phase response at f1 and f2(f1 < f2)

-φ1 at f1+φ2 at f2

+φ1 at f1-φ2 at f2

K. Niotaki, A. Georgiadis, A. Collado, ‘Dual-Band Rectifier Based on Resistance Compression Networks,’ in Proc. IEEE MTT-S IMS, Tampa, 1-6 June 2014

20

• A small variation of Zin is achieved

• A dual-band RCN is obtained

Dual-Band ResistanceCompression Networks

K. Niotaki, A. Georgiadis, A. Collado, ‘Dual-Band Rectifier Based on Resistance Compression Networks,’ in Proc. IEEE MTT-S IMS, Tampa, 1-6 June 2014

21

Dual-Band Rectifiers

• Dual-Band Resistance Compressed Rectifier− 2 unit cells for each branch− 915 MHz and 2.45 GHz− Skyworks Schottky SMS7630 diode

22

Dual-Band Rectifiers• Performance comparison

− Resistance compressed rectifier− Conventional envelope detector rectifier

• Rectifier design− Harmonic balance analysis (HB)− Large signal Scattering parameters (LSSP)

23

LR 8.7 nHLL 100 nHCR 0.8 pFCL 2.7 pF

Resistance Compressed Rectifier

• Schottky diode – SMS7630

• Arlon 25N– 30 mil– εr=3.38

24

Dual-Band Rectifiers

• Efficiency Improvement of − 37 % 62.3 % for Rload=0.5 kOhm &

Pin=0 dBm at 915 MHz

Conventional Rectifier Resistance-Compressed Rectifier

25

Dual-Band Rectifiers• Efficiency Improvement of

− 41.2 % 54.4 % for Rload=0.5 kOhm & Pin=0 dBm at 2.45 GHz

Conventional Rectifier Resistance-Compressed Rectifier

26

Dual-Band Rectifiers• RF-DC conversion efficiency at 915 MHz

− Rload=1 kOhm

Conventional Rectifier Resistance-Compressed Rectifier

27

Dual-Band Rectifiers• RF-DC conversion efficiency at 2.45 GHz

− Rload=1 kOhm

Conventional Rectifier Resistance-Compressed Rectifier

28

Rectenna Design• Dual band metamaterial based resistance compression

network.

K. Niotaki, A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, “Dual band rectifier based on resistance compression networks,” in Proc.2014 IEEE MTT-S IMS, Tampa, 1-6 June 2014.

915 MHz 2.45 GHz

29

Signal Design

• Signals with time-varying envelope (PAPR > 0 dB) lead to higher rectifier RF-DC conversion efficiency

− Multi-sines (Durgin, Carvalho, Popovic, …)− Chaotic signals− White noise− Random modulation (multi-carrier)

30

Signal Design• First experiments: chaotic oscillator

433 MHz chaotic generator

Colpitts based chaotic generator

Bipolar transistor BFP183w

300 310 320 330 340time (nsec)

-0.5

-0.25

0

0.25

0.5

0 200 400 600 800-80

-60

-40

-20

0

frequency (MHz)

A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, "Improving Wireless Power Transmission Efficiency Using Chaotic Waveforms," in Proc. IEEE MTT-S IMS 2012, Montreal, 17-22 June 2012.

31

Signal Design

chaotic signal power[250 MHz – 600MHZ]

-6.5 dBm

Need to filter chaotic signal

One-tone signal power[250MHz – 600MHZ]

Total power of 1-tone signal selected to be equal to the chaotic signal total power in the bandwidth of the rectifier

A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, "Improving Wireless Power Transmission Efficiency Using Chaotic Waveforms," in Proc. IEEE MTT-S IMS 2012, Montreal, 17-22 June 2012.

32

Signal Design

-26 -22 -18 -14 -10 -60

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

Input Power (dBm)

1.2

A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, "Improving Wireless Power Transmission Efficiency Using Chaotic Waveforms," in Proc. IEEE MTT-S IMS 2012, Montreal, 17-22 June 2012.

33

Signal DesignSignal PAPR (dB)1-tone 3OFDM 12Whitenoise

13.7

Chaotic 14.8

PAPR[x(t)] ~ PAPR[e(t)] + 3 dB

A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, 'Optimal Waveforms for Efficient Wireless Power Transmission,' IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, 2014, to appear.

34

Signal Design

A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, 'Optimal Waveforms for Efficient Wireless Power Transmission,' IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, 2014, to appear.

rectifier operates at 433 MHzSkyworks SMS7630-02LF diode output load of 5.6 KOhm

35

Signal Design

A. Georgiadis, A. Collado "Mode Locked Oscillator Arrays for Efficient Wireless Power Transmission," 2013 IEEE Wireless Power Transfer Conference (WPT), Perugia, May 15-16, 2013.A. Boaventura, A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, N.B. Carvalho, ‘Spatial Power Combining of Multi-sine Signals for Wireless Power Transmission Applications,’ IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Special Issue on Wireless Power Transfer, 2014, accepted for publication

High PAPR signals saturate the PAs

Spatial power combining – each tone amplified independently and then combined in free space

Mode-locked coupled oscillators – establish phase reference and control phase shift among elements

36

Signal Design

4x1 active antenna oscillator array at 6 GHz

Patch antenna aperture coupled to a VCO

A. Boaventura, A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, N.B. Carvalho, ‘Spatial Power Combining of Multi-sine Signals for Wireless Power Transmission Applications,’ IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Special Issue on Wireless Power Transfer, 2014, accepted for publication

37

Signal Design

A. Boaventura, A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, N.B. Carvalho, ‘Spatial Power Combining of Multi-sine Signals for Wireless Power Transmission Applications,’ IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Special Issue on Wireless Power Transfer, 2014, accepted for publication

Step1: 2 VCOs with 50 MHz spacing. Mixing products are created

Step2: 3 VCOs. The third one with a free running frequency corresponding to one of the mixing products

Step3: 4 VCOs. The fourth one with a free running frequency corresponding to one of the mixing products

38

Signal Design

A. Boaventura, A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, N.B. Carvalho, ‘Spatial Power Combining of Multi-sine Signals for Wireless Power Transmission Applications,’ IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Special Issue on Wireless Power Transfer, 2014, accepted for publication

Comparison of obtained DC voltage by a rectifier when using:

generated mode-locked signal with high PAPR signal

single carrier signal

Same total average power for both signals

39

Signal Design

A. Boaventura, A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, N.B. Carvalho, ‘Spatial Power Combining of Multi-sine Signals for Wireless Power Transmission Applications,’ IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Special Issue on Wireless Power Transfer, 2014, accepted for publication

2-22 -20 -18 -16 -14 -12 -10-24-26

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

f = 45 MHzf = 75 MHz

Power gain compares the obtained DC voltage by a rectifier when using the high PAPR signal in comparison with a one-tone signal

Improved performance when using the high PAPR mode-locked signal

40

Challenges - Applications

• Multi-technology harvesters− Solar antennas and rectennas

• Flexible electronics− Paper - Textile – Plastic substrates

• Solar powered batteryless circuits

41

Challenges - Applications• Solar RFID tag

− Solar => DC => RF − UHF Class-E oscillator− Solar antenna

• MMID (SIW)− SIW 24 GHz rectenna− Integrate rectifier inside

SIW cavity

24 25 2623 27frequency (GHz)

5

10

15

0

20simulationsmeasurements

•A. Georgiadis and A. Collado, "Improving Range of Passive RFID Tags Utilizing Energy Harvesting •and High Efficiency Class-E Oscillators," in Proc. EuCAP 2012, Prague, 26-30 March 2012.

A. Collado, A. Georgiadis, "24 GHz Substrate Integrated Waveguide (SIW) Rectenna for Energy Harvesting and Wireless Power Transmission", 2013 IEEE MTT-S IMS, Seattle 2-7 June 2013.

42

Multiple Technology HarvestersSolar / EM

K. Niotaki, F. Giuppi, A. Georgiadis and A. Collado. Solar/EM energy harvester for autonomous operation of a monitoring sensor platform . Wireless Power Transfer, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 44-50, Mar 2014.

43

Multiple Technology HarvestersThermal / EM

M. Virili, A. Georgiadis, K. Niotaki, A. Collado, F. Alimenti, P. Mezzanotte,L. Roselli, N.B. Carvalho, ‘Design and Optimization of an Antenna with Thermo-Electric Generator (TEG) for Autonomous Wireless Nodes,’ in Proc. 2014 IEEE RFID-TA, Tampere, Finland, 8-9 Sep 2014

44

Conclusion

Multi-band rectennas allow wider application

Reactive networks capable of minimizing rectenna efficiency sensitivity to load variation

High PAPR leads to higher efficiency

Spatial power combining for WPT transmitters

45

Cambridge Journal on Wireless Power Transfer

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=WPT

Wireless Power Transfer (WPT) is the first journal dedicatedto publishing original research and industrial developmentsrelating to wireless power.

Vol. 1. No. 1. March 2014Vol. 1. No. 2. Accepting contributions …..WPT will cover all methods of wireless power transfer andarticles will reflect the full diversity of applications for thistechnology, including mobile communications, medical implants,automotive technology, and spacecraft engineering.

46

2014 IEEE RFID-TA Conference8-9 Sep 2014, Tampere, Finlandhttp://www.rfid-ta2014.fi/

47

AcknowledgementIEEE MTT Society

EU Marie Curie projectSWAP, FP7 251557http://www.fp7-swap.eu/

Acknowledgment:K. Niotaki, A. Collado, CTTCA. Boaventura, N. Carvalho, Univ. of AveiroS. Kim, M.M. Tentzeris Georgia Tech.

Apostolos GeorgiadisDepartment of Microwave Systems and NanotechnologySenior Researcher Centre Tecnologic de Telecomunicacions de Catalunya (CTTC) Avda Carl Friedrich Gauss 7 08860 Castelldefels - Barcelona Spain

Email: ageorgiadis@cttc.es Google: https://sites.google.com/site/apostolosgeorgiadis1/home

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